A Cognitive Method for Automatically Retrieving Complex Information on a Large Scale

Sensors (Basel). 2020 May 28;20(11):3057. doi: 10.3390/s20113057.

Abstract

Modern retrieval systems tend to deteriorate because of their large output of useless and even misleading information, especially for complex search requests on a large scale. Complex information retrieval (IR) tasks requiring multi-hop reasoning need to fuse multiple scattered text across two or more documents. However, there are two challenges for multi-hop retrieval. To be specific, the first challenge is that since some important supporting facts have little lexical or semantic relationship with the retrieval query, the retriever often omits them; the second challenge is that once a retriever chooses misinformation related to the query as the entities of cognitive graphs, the retriever will fail. In this study, in order to improve the performance of retrievers in complex tasks, an intelligent sensor technique was proposed based on a sub-scope with cognitive reasoning (2SCR-IR), a novel method of retrieving reasoning paths over the cognitive graph to provide users with verified multi-hop reasoning chains. Inspired by the users' process of step-by-step searching online, 2SCR-IR includes a dynamic fusion layer that starts from the entities mentioned in the given query, explores the cognitive graph dynamically built from the query and contexts, gradually finds relevant supporting entities mentioned in the given documents, and verifies the rationality of the retrieval facts. Our experimental results show that 2SCR-IR achieves competitive results on the HotpotQA full wiki and distractor settings, and outperforms the previous state-of-the-art methods by a more than two points absolute gain on the full wiki setting.

Keywords: complex search request; evidence chains; information retriever sensor; multi-hop reasoning.